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SUMMER CONFERENCE 2019Evolving Narratives: Internationalization, Interculturalization, and Indigenization
JUNE 23–26, 2019 | WHISTLER, BC
Establishing Comprehensive RelationshipsThe Case of Ireland & BC
Marianna Costello - Education in IrelandGerard O’ Donovan – Technological Higher Education Association of Ireland
John Shalagan - JTS International Higher Education ConsultancyColin Ewart - BC Colleges
Agenda
Introducing Ireland
The Technological Higher Education Sector
Establishing Comprehensive Relationships: Ontario Case Study
Focus on British Columbia
Education in Ireland
Introducing Ireland
◉ Population = 4.8 million
◉ Area = 84,421 km²
◉ Capital = Dublin
◉ Member of the European Union and Eurozone (€)
◉ 1 in 7 Canadians claim Irish heritage
◉ YVR – DUB = 9-hour direct flight
Education in Ireland
Predominantly a Public System
◉ Total enrolments in system (2016-17): 225,628
◉ 11 Institutes of Technology
◉ 8 Universities
◉ 3 Public Colleges
◉ 5 Private Colleges
Education in Ireland
51.52%34.34%
14.14%
Disciplines
STEMM
Arts, Humanities & Social Sciences
Services & Other
Slide
• A• B• C
Ireland’s International Education Strategy 2016-2020
1. Supportive National Framework
2. Internationally-Oriented & Globally Competitive HEIs
3. Sustainable Growth in the English Language Training Sector
4. Succeeding Abroad
Ireland: Learn More, Experience More, Be More.
Ireland: Learn More, Experience More, Be More.
Ireland: Learn More, Experience More, Be More.
Ireland: Learn More, Experience More, Be More.
Ireland: Learn More, Experience More, Be More.
Ireland: Learn More, Experience More, Be More.
Technological Higher Education Sector
Gerard O’Donovan
Head of Faculty of Business and HumanitiesCork Institute of Technology
International Students
Internatonal Students (Full-tiee– TOTAL 4,002 (6% of full-tim mnrolimnts)– EU 622 (1%)– Non-EU 3,380 (5%)
Internatonal Students (Part-tiee– TOTAL 391 (2% of part-tim mnrolimnts)– EU 175 (1%)– Non-EU 216 (1%)
Erasius Studmnts Outgoing (mxcluding work placmimnts) 1,698Erasius Studmnts Incoiing (mxcluding work placmimnts ) 6,091Othmr Exchangm Studmnts 249
Ovmr 100 countrims rmprmsmntmd:Main Non-EU countrims arm China, Malaysia, Oian, Saudi Arabia, India, Canada, Kuwait, USA, Nigmria, Brazil
Institute’s Philosophy
◉ Undergraduate and postgraduate programmes with strong emphasis on the needs of the workplace and the individual
◉ A research ethos that recognises the role research plays in the development of society, the economy and the individual
◉ Seamless access, transfer and progression◉ Curricula: support IoT philosophy by making use of cooperative
education, work-based research projects, problem-based learning, technology-enhanced and blended learning
◉ Graduates who are: • skilled in the application of discipline knowledge, principles and
concepts• reflective practitioners in the totality of their lives• effective communicators• life-long learners• culturally and socially aware
What we are really all about
Move Towards Technological Universities
Move Towards Technological Universities
• Labour market focus reflected in approach to curriculum development (involvement of industry) and cutting-edge disciplinary areas across Levels 6-9 of NFQ e.g.
• Connected and Autonomous Vehicles (IT Sligo)• Cyber Security (CIT)• Energy Management (LIT)• Aerospace Engineering (IT Carlow)• 3D Design, Model Making and Art (IADT)
◉ In disciplines that support key national and regional industries or the health and wellbeing of communities e.g.◉ Logistics and Supply Chain Management (TU Dublin, City
Campus)◉ Architectural Technology (WIT)◉ Dental Nursing (LYIT, AIT)◉ Veterinary Nursing (AIT, DKIT)
Technological Higher Education: Labour market focus
Programmes relevant to the needs of employers are the lifeblood of the sector
◉ Such provision necessitates constant innovation and adaptability on the part of the institutions - reflected in the fact that they have been the subject of three major pieces of legislation within the past thirty years
◉ IoTs and now technological universities provide programmes that ‘reflect the needs of individuals, business, enterprise, the professions, the community, local interests and other stakeholders’ in their regions;
◉ and which require them to promote the involvement of those same stakeholders ‘in the design and delivery’ of their programmes (Technological Universities Act, 2018, section 9)
Cyber Ireland Objectives
• Address the Talent challenge
• Innovation - Enhanced information security research and innovation between industry and with academia
• Internationalisation - attract and support FDI & start-ups
• Represent the Cyber industry for Government liaison
• Support and compliment the National Cyber Security Strategy
• Providing members with a platform to Network and connect
Cyber Security Ecosystem
IoT’s Strengths
◉ Internationally Accredited Programmes◉ Small Class Sizes◉ Impactful Research◉ Strong Industry Links◉ Strong Graduate Attributes◉ Work Ready Graduates◉ Strong International Links◉ Clear access and pathways for students
The Case of OntarioThe Case of Ontario
Maple Leafs to ShamrocksMaple Leafs to Shamrocks
John Shalagan
JTS International Higher Education Consultancy
Origins of An AgreementOrigins of An Agreement
In the Beginning…In the Beginning…
◉ In the summer and fall of 2010 the Ontario Ministry of Training Colleges and Universities (MTCU) held informal introductory discussions with representatives from the Technological Higher Education Association at NAFSA in May and at NACAC in September.
◉ This was followed by a formal meeting in Toronto between staff from MTCU and Enterprise Ireland to look at the possibility of developing an MOU between the 13 Irish Institutes of Technology and Ontario’s 24 publicly assisted colleges.
The Grunt WorkThe Grunt Work
◉ Enterprise Ireland and MTCU then agreed to modestly co-sponsor a visit of Ontario colleges to visit the Irish IOTI’s in Spring of 2011.
◉ A delegation of 13 representatives from Ontario’s 24 colleges which included presidents, vice presidents and deans visited Ireland and a reciprocal visit by a delegation from THEA occurred in late June 2011.
◉ On November 28, 2011 an MOU between Colleges Ontario and thea was signed.
The Evolutionary ProcessThe Evolutionary Process
2011 to 2016◉ Initial focus was on the development of partnerships and
pathways between Irish ITs and Ontario Colleges.
◉ Irish pathways offer value to Ontario college students in terms of time, money and international experience.
◉ With partner familiarity came specific pathways on a program by program basis.
◉ More marketing of overseas options were provided to students in their final year.
◉ Visits to partner institutions, more feedback fromgraduates help build recognition and momentum.
Expanding the PartnershipExpanding the Partnership
2016 to 2021
◉ More students are seeing the value of study abroad and hear about successes from those who have experienced Ireland.
◉ Partnerships now have been expanded to include faculty teacher exchanges with partner institutions as well as professional development opportunities.
◉ Growing emphasis on research partnerships. Ontario colleges gaining greater access to funding for applied research. More opportunity for collaborative research projects.
Focus on British Columbia
31
BC Colleges and THEA – Master Agreement
Objectives
◉ To strengthen, promote and develop co-operation in
education, training, research, development and innovation
on the basis of equality and mutual benefit.
◉ Specific agreements in areas of common interest between
the Colleges in BC and the Irish Institutes of Technology
will be appended to this Master Agreement in the form of
schedules as they are developed by institutions.
32
Master Agreement Scope
Areas of Cooperation: 1. Degree completion opportunities at the Irish Institutes (up
to PhD level) for graduates of colleges in BC; 2. Opportunities for graduates of the Irish Institutes in
Graduate Certificate programs in colleges in BC;3. Professional development of faculty and administrative
staff (to include access to the Masters in Teaching approved in the Irish system);
4. Faculty, student and administrative exchanges;5. Partnerships in innovation and applied research, including
potential for joint research;6. Distance education.
33
Agreement Signed in Kelowna, June 2017
Leaders of BC Colleges and the Technological Higher Education Association of Ireland (THEA) and CICAN at Okanagan College celebrate the signing of a formal MOU
34
BC Colleges - Study Tour March 4-9, 2018
Purpose To activate future collaboration between Colleges in British Columbia and Institutes of Technology in Ireland to develop mutually beneficial student mobility, exchange, and collaborative opportunities between institutions in both jurisdictions.
Locations/Institutes VisitedDublin – THEA and IT Tallaght; Carlow IT; Waterford IT; Cork IT; IT Tralee; Limerick IT;IT Sligo;IADT (Institute of Art, Design & Technology)
35
Visit with IT Cork / Employer Partnerships
36
BC Colleges - Canadian Embassy Visit
37
BC Colleges - Progress / Next Steps
1. Articulation agreements signed or in development with 5 BC Colleges (Coast Mountain College, North Island College, Northern Lights College, Selkirk College, and Vancouver Community College);
2. Formalizing general MOU and exchange agreement with 1 College (North Island College);
3. Degree completion - North Island College & IT Tralee (BA Culinary Arts)
4. Market Study Visit by Ireland - June 26-28, 2019 Visiting Vancouver Community College, Langara College, Camosun College & Okanagan College
5. Potential Study Tour 2, Fall 2019 for BC delegates to formally sign Agreements
38
Discussion
Moderator: Colin Ewart
“The Nuts & Bolts of Establishing Comprehensive Relationships”
39
Any questions?You can find us at
• @EduIreland
• www.educationinireland.com
Thank you